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Metal Circus
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| Metal Circus | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP by | ||||
| Released | October 1983 | |||
| Recorded | December 1982 – January 1983 | |||
| Studio | Total Access, Redondo Beach, California | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 18:57 | |||
| Label | SST (020) | |||
| Producer |
| |||
| Hüsker Dü chronology | ||||
| ||||
Metal Circus is an EP by American punk rock band Hüsker Dü, released in 1983 by SST Records. As one of their early records, it was largely rooted in the band's initial hardcore punk style. However, signs of a new, poppier influence emerge on Metal Circus, particularly in the songs sung by Grant Hart ("It's Not Funny Anymore" and "Diane"). It also features some of Bob Mould's most passionate singing and shows further development in his guitar playing. Harmonic, chorus-type effects applied to Mould's guitar are more prominent. The change from the furious hardcore moments of Land Speed Record and Everything Falls Apart towards increasing melodicism hints at the groundbreaking new approach that was to be seen on the band's next release, Zen Arcade.
The horrific murder depicted in the anguished "Diane" is based upon the murder of West St. Paul waitress Diane Edwards.[2] The song was covered by Coffin Break in 1989, Irish band Therapy? in 1995, Superdrag in 1998 and Gravenhurst in 2004 .
While only 21 seconds shorter than their debut studio album, Everything Falls Apart, and generally viewed as an EP, Metal Circus was almost released as a 30-minute album with 12 songs. The outtakes were "Standing by the Sea" (later used on Zen Arcade), "Heavy Handed", "Is Today the Day?", "You Think I'm Scared", and "Won't Change"[3] (which later appeared on the compilation A Diamond Hidden in the Mouth of a Corpse).[4] In 2017, The Numero Group released the Savage Young Dü compilation of early Hüsker Dü material. A bonus edition of the compilation was packaged with a 7" entitled Extra Circus containing the outtakes from the EP's sessions.[5]
Critical reception
[edit]| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Robert Christgau | A[6] |
| Rolling Stone | |
| Spin | |
In a 1984 Trouser Press review, John Leland said the band "flirts with heavy metal, but also reveal strains of folk and psychedelia. The metal ventures (noisy lead guitars) expand Hüsker Dü's sound without getting sludgy or bombastic. On the slower tunes,...the guitars drone like a supercharged Dream Syndicate. On the fast tunes they smoke."[9]
AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine said that Metal Circus "is the first indication of Hüsker Dü's greatness," adding that "With these five songs, the band shows more invention, skill, and melody than it did over the course of a full album with Everything Falls Apart, and both Bob Mould and Grant Hart emerge as significant songwriters."[1]
Track listing
[edit]Side one
- "Real World" (Mould) – 2:27
- "Deadly Skies" (Mould) – 1:50
- "It's Not Funny Anymore" (Hart) – 2:12
- "First of the Last Calls" (Mould) – 2:48
Side two
- "Lifeline" (Mould) – 2:19
- "Diane" (Hart) – 4:42
- "Out on a Limb" (Mould) – 2:39
Personnel
[edit]Liner notes adapted from the album sleeve.[10]
- Hüsker Dü
- Bob Mould – vocals, guitar
- Grant Hart – vocals, drums
- Greg Norton – bass guitar
- Technical
- Hüsker Dü – producer
- Spot – producer, engineer
- Fake Name Graphx – album cover[11]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Metal Circus at AllMusic
- ^ Headley, Janice (October 17, 2019). "13 Songs for Halloween: "Diane" by Hüsker Dü". KEXP-FM. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
- ^ Scott, Tim (October 23, 2017). "Hüsker Dü's Long Lost 1982 Master Tape Is Now Available". Vice. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
- ^ "Husker du Annotated Discography/Demos, Outtakes, Rehearsals".
- ^ "Inside Husker Du's Early-Years Box Set Treasure Trove". Rolling Stone. September 5, 2017.
- ^ Christgau, Robert (January 24, 1984). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. New York. Retrieved April 29, 2013.
- ^ Brackett, Nathan. "Hüsker Dü". The New Rolling Stone Album Guide. November 2004. pg. 398, cited March 18, 2010
- ^ Weisbard, Eric. "Hüsker Dü". Spin Alternative Record Guide. October 1995. p.187
- ^ Leland, John (February 1984). "American Underground". Trouser Press. Vol. 10, no. 12. New York. p. 32. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
- ^ Metal Circus (Back cover). SST Records. 1983. SST 020.
- ^ "Fake Name Communications". Discogs. Retrieved January 30, 2021.
Metal Circus
View on GrokipediaBackground
Early career
Hüsker Dü was formed in 1979 in Saint Paul, Minnesota, by guitarist and vocalist Bob Mould, drummer and vocalist Grant Hart, and bassist Greg Norton.[4] The trio drew from the raw energy of the punk and hardcore scenes.[7] Emerging from the vibrant Minneapolis-St. Paul music community, the band quickly established a reputation for high-speed, aggressive performances that captured the intensity of early hardcore punk.[7] The band's initial releases reflected their relentless pace and DIY ethos. In 1982, they issued the live album Land Speed Record on New Alliance Records, capturing a blistering performance from the previous year that showcased their breakneck tempos and raw power.[8] That same year, they released the 7" single In a Free Land on New Alliance Records, a limited-run effort that highlighted their growing songwriting amid the chaos of the scene.[9] By early 1983, Everything Falls Apart, their debut studio LP on Reflex, arrived as a 14-track burst of hardcore fury, clocking in at under 20 minutes and solidifying their status in the underground. Throughout these formative years, Hüsker Dü grappled with the rigors of non-stop touring, crisscrossing the United States in a van to build a grassroots following while navigating the instability of small indie labels.[10] In 1982, they transitioned to SST Records, marking a pivotal shift that connected them to a broader network of like-minded artists.[11] Founded in 1978 by Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn, SST had become a cornerstone indie label for West Coast hardcore, championing the DIY spirit and releasing influential works from bands like Black Flag and the Minutemen.[12] This move provided greater distribution and resources, even as the band began subtly incorporating more melodic structures into their sound.[13]EP conception
In late 1982, following the recording of their debut album Everything Falls Apart, Hüsker Dü began planning their next release with SST Records, with whom they had signed that fall as the label's first non-West Coast act.[11] The band initially intended to produce a full-length album comprising 12 new songs, many of which were debuted live during a December 14, 1982, performance billed as "Hüskers Goodbye" at Minneapolis's 7th Street Entry venue.[14] However, SST requested a shorter EP format to align with their release schedule, prompting the group to adapt the project into Metal Circus.[15] As bassist Greg Norton later recalled, "We wanted to put out a full album, but SST said, ‘No, do an EP,’ so we made Metal Circus work for us."[15] The conception of Metal Circus reflected Hüsker Dü's growing dissatisfaction with the rigid, speed-obsessed ethos of hardcore punk, which they felt constrained their artistic growth after Everything Falls Apart.[11] Guitarist Bob Mould and drummer Grant Hart sought to experiment beyond pure hardcore, incorporating more structured song forms, melodic elements, and vocal harmonies to infuse pop and rock influences into their sound.[14] This evolution allowed for greater personal expression, moving away from genre dogma toward a broader punk-rock hybrid.[11] From the 12 tracks recorded during sessions in December 1982 and January 1983, the band selected seven for the EP, carefully balancing Mould's and Hart's songwriting contributions to showcase their dual creative voices.[14] Mould penned four songs, including the politically charged "Real World" and the frustrated anthem "It's Not Funny Anymore," while Hart contributed three, such as the narrative-driven "Diane" and the urgent "Lifeline."[14] This selection emphasized the band's emerging melodic sophistication while retaining their raw energy, setting the stage for further innovation on subsequent releases.[14]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Metal Circus took place from December 1982 to January 1983 at Total Access Recording in Redondo Beach, California. The band arrived at the studio a few days after Christmas 1982 and completed the sessions in a matter of days. This location was selected due to its longstanding association with SST Records and frequent use by Black Flag, which provided an ideal setup for the label's punk and hardcore acts.[16][17][18] The sessions emphasized an intensive pace with short bursts of activity to preserve the band's raw, high-velocity energy, often tracking instruments live to maintain authenticity and immediacy. They utilized analog equipment standard for punk productions of the period, including Ampex tape machines and an Amek console, prioritizing speed, volume, and unpolished intensity over overdubs.[19] Mixing was finalized in January 1983 at the same studio, followed shortly by mastering at K-Disc in Hollywood.Production team
Metal Circus was self-produced by the core trio of Hüsker Dü—guitarist/vocalist Bob Mould, drummer/vocalist Grant Hart, and bassist Greg Norton.[20] The EP also received co-production and engineering from Spot (Glenn Lockett), SST Records' in-house engineer renowned for his work on seminal punk albums by Black Flag and Minutemen.[21] Spot's contributions emphasized a balance in the recording process, guiding the band toward clearer mixes that preserved the raw punk energy while incorporating subtle overdubs, such as vocal harmonies, to enhance melodic elements without diluting the aggression.[22] No external musicians were involved, with Mould, Hart, and Norton handling all instrumentation, vocals, and arrangements themselves.[20] The production operated on a modest budget typical of early 1980s independent punk releases through SST, reflecting the label's DIY ethos and resource constraints.[23]Composition
Musical style
Metal Circus is an EP by the American rock band Hüsker Dü, released in 1983 on SST Records, spanning a total runtime of 18:57 across seven tracks and pressed at 45 RPM on 12-inch vinyl to achieve louder playback volume.[24][1] The record maintains a hardcore punk foundation characterized by blistering tempos and aggressive energy, as evident in tracks like "Deadly Skies," which exemplifies the high-BPM speed typical of the genre's frantic pace.[25][26] However, it introduces melodic hooks and vocal harmonies, particularly in Grant Hart's contributions such as "It's Not Funny Anymore," marking a shift toward tuneful structures that foreshadow the band's later post-hardcore evolution.[27][28] Instrumentally, the EP features Bob Mould's angular, ringing guitar riffs with creative distortion and chorus effects, providing a harmonic edge to the raw punk assault.[27][28] Greg Norton's driving bass lines offer an abstract yet melodic foundation, while Grant Hart's dynamic drumming delivers precision and speed, enabling shifts from noise-driven chaos to more structured arrangements.[27][26] This instrumentation balances the EP's hardcore roots with emerging pop influences, differentiating Hüsker Dü from contemporaries like Black Flag through a blend of velocity and catchiness.[29][6] The production, handled by Spot and the band, yields a raw and aggressive sound that is clearer than their prior releases like Everything Falls Apart, though initial pressings retain a muddy quality with echo-fuzzed guitars and distant drums.[26][6] This approach amplifies the EP's key innovation: a synthesis of speed-punk aggression and melodic choruses, positioning Metal Circus as a pivotal bridge from hardcore to post-hardcore.[29][28]Lyrics and themes
The songwriting on Metal Circus was split between guitarist Bob Mould and drummer Grant Hart, marking an early showcase of their collaborative dynamic in Hüsker Dü. Mould penned five tracks—"Real World," "Deadly Skies," "First of the Last Calls," "Lifeline," and "Out on a Limb"—while Hart contributed the remaining two: "It's Not Funny Anymore" and "Diane." This division highlighted their distinct voices, with Mould's contributions often leaning toward broader societal critiques and Hart's exploring more intimate, narrative-driven stories.[30] Dominant themes across the EP revolve around alienation and frustration in modern life, intertwined with explorations of personal relationships and loss. In "Real World," Mould critiques societal numbness and fear-driven isolation, depicting a world where individuals lock their doors against chaos rather than engage with it, reflecting a punk-infused disillusionment with anarchy and conformity. Similarly, "Deadly Skies" evokes apocalyptic imagery through stream-of-consciousness lyrics about nuclear dread and the futility of protest, capturing frustration with geopolitical helplessness during the Cold War era. Mould's songs extend these motifs into personal territory, as seen in "Lifeline," which grapples with emotional disconnection and the search for human connection amid isolation, and "First of the Last Calls," which addresses the destructive cycle of alcoholism in relationships. "Out on a Limb" by Mould further delves into relational risks and vulnerability, underscoring themes of loss and precarious emotional bonds. "It's Not Funny Anymore," a Hart composition, amplifies frustration with superficial freedoms, portraying a world where personal agency feels meaningless and joy turns hollow.[14][28][31] A standout track is Hart's "Diane," a haunting tribute to Diane Edwards, a 19-year-old waitress murdered in 1980 by serial killer Joseph Ture in West St. Paul, Minnesota. Written from the perpetrator's chilling perspective, the song blends true crime elements with raw emotional depth, confronting abduction, rape, and violence while evoking grief—Hart had a vague personal acquaintance with Edwards, intensifying its mournful tone. Hart later ceased performing it due to the psychological toll, emphasizing its unflinching portrayal of loss and horror. This narrative approach contrasts with the EP's more abstract pieces, grounding the themes of alienation and relational peril in a specific, tragic real-world event.[32] The lyrics' delivery enhances their impact through shared lead vocals between Mould and Hart, a departure from the band's prior shout-along style, with layered harmonies adding newfound emotional nuance and vulnerability. Mould's anguished howls in tracks like "Deadly Skies" convey urgency and despair, while Hart's plaintive, elegiac phrasing in "Diane" and "It's Not Funny Anymore" lends intimacy, fostering a sense of collective introspection amid the EP's punk energy.[14]Release and promotion
Release details
Metal Circus was released in October 1983 by SST Records under catalog number SST 020.[20][2] The initial format consisted of a 12-inch vinyl EP pressed at 45 RPM, available in both black and colored vinyl variants.[20] Later reissues in the 1990s included CD editions.[2] The artwork featured a simple design designed by Grant Hart under the pseudonym Fake Name Graphx, incorporating circus imagery that reflected the title's metaphorical depiction of chaotic intensity.[14] Distribution occurred primarily through SST's mail-order service and independent record stores, aimed at the U.S. underground punk scene.[12] The EP achieved no mainstream chart success but recorded strong sales within indie circuits. The release was bolstered by subsequent touring across the country.[34]Touring
Following the October 1983 release of Metal Circus, Hüsker Dü embarked on immediate U.S. van tours, sharing bills with labelmates and peers such as the Minutemen during late-year dates in California and the East Coast.[35] These grueling road trips included performances on October 20 at Fiesta House in Los Angeles and October 22 at On Broadway Theatre in San Francisco, both supporting the Minutemen alongside acts like the Stains and the Dicks, as well as a December 17 show at Danceteria in New York City co-headlining with the Minutemen. The band incorporated fresh Metal Circus tracks like "Diane" and "Deadly Skies" into sets heavy with material from prior releases such as Everything Falls Apart, blending the EP's raw aggression with their established hardcore repertoire.[34] Key performances featured the band in SST Records-backed multi-act showcases and regional festivals, which amplified their presence in the California and Midwest punk circuits.[36] These events, often involving fellow SST artists like the Minutemen and echoing earlier collaborative tours, fostered grassroots momentum among underground audiences in venues from Los Angeles to Minneapolis, where Hüsker Dü originated.[37] Promotional activities remained grassroots-oriented, with limited interviews in punk fanzines such as Flipside, which profiled the band earlier in 1983.[38] The hardcore punk style of Metal Circus precluded major radio airplay, confining outreach to DIY print media and live appearances rather than mainstream channels.[39] The relentless pace of these van tours—spanning cross-country drives and frequent gigs—exacerbated internal band strains amid sleep deprivation and interpersonal friction, though it ultimately cemented Hüsker Dü's standing as a formidable live force in the American hardcore scene.[40] The visceral energy of their performances, mirroring the EP's high-octane intensity, fueled organic word-of-mouth promotion within punk communities, bolstering underground sales through fan networks rather than traditional marketing.[41]Reception
Initial reception
Upon its 1983 release, Metal Circus garnered praise in the punk press for its high energy and innovative approach that pushed beyond standard hardcore conventions. In Maximum Rocknroll issue 9, the EP was lauded as elevating Hüsker Dü's musical brilliance to "dizzying new heights," with songs described as "loud, powerful, and creative," particularly highlighting Bob Mould's shimmering guitar sound.[42] Key early reviews emphasized the record's advancements in melody and structure. Trouser Press noted the EP's "melodic breakthroughs," portraying it as a collection of anthems—slow and fast—with twisted, abrasive guitar licks and lyrics, marking a significant step forward from the band's prior album Everything Falls Apart. This momentum positioned the band as one of SST Records' leading acts alongside the Minutemen, contributing to the label's rising prominence in the underground scene through 1983 and 1984.[12]Later reception
In the years following its 1983 release, Metal Circus has garnered enduring praise from critics for its role in evolving hardcore punk toward more melodic and introspective forms. Music critic Robert Christgau gave the EP an A grade in his consumer guide, praising it for translating "hardcore's hyperdrive ritual into song with heart," particularly through Bob Mould's hook-laden guitar work and Grant Hart's emotional contributions on tracks like "Diane."[43] AllMusic assigns it an 8.4 out of 10 rating based on user and editorial aggregation, underscoring its status as a key early document in the band's catalog.[2] Michael Azerrad's 2001 book Our Band Could Be Your Life positions Metal Circus as pivotal for post-hardcore, noting how Hart and Mould's tuneful singing and ambitious songwriting marked a departure from raw aggression toward broader indie rock innovation.[44] Critics have since viewed the EP as a precursor to the 1980s alternative rock explosion, blending punk's intensity with subtle melodic twists that influenced subsequent genre developments.[28] A 2023 retrospective in Punktuation Magazine highlighted the band's autonomy, from self-produced sessions to Hart's DIY artwork under the Fake Name Graphx pseudonym, framing Metal Circus as their first true classic and a "hypersonic step" in making U.S. punk more accessible.[14] In 2025, reviews accompanying represses reaffirmed its place in the punk canon, celebrating its balance of fury and melody as timelessly vital amid ongoing indie revivals.[28]Credits
Track listing
All songs were written by Bob Mould or Grant Hart, published by Granary Music (BMI) except "It's Not Funny Anymore" and "Diane" published by Nora/Hi Art (BMI).[45][46]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Side one | |||
| 1. | "Real World" | Mould | 2:27 |
| 2. | "Deadly Skies" | Mould | 1:50 |
| 3. | "It's Not Funny Anymore" | Hart | 2:12 |
| 4. | "First of the Last Calls" | Mould | 2:48 |
| Side two | |||
| 5. | "Lifeline" | Mould | 2:19 |
| 6. | "Diane" | Hart | 4:42 |
| 7. | "Out on a Limb" | Mould | 2:39 |
| Total length: | 18:57 |
Personnel
Hüsker Dü- Bob Mould – guitar, vocals (lead vocals on "Real World", "Deadly Skies", "First of the Last Calls", "Lifeline", and "Out on a Limb")[14]
- Grant Hart – drums, vocals (lead vocals on "It's Not Funny Anymore" and "Diane")
- Greg Norton – bass
- Spot – engineering, mixing[20]
- Hüsker Dü – production (with Spot)[48]
